Ocean observation helps seasonal forecasts

 meyerw
meyerw
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Long-term observations of the oceans around Australia are providing the nation's climate scientists with significant benchmarks for seasonal forecasts and monitoring future climate change.Initiated near the end of a two-year El Nino event in May 1983, the program involves the deployment of simple "expendable instruments" (XBTs) from commercial shipping that measure temperature and currents to a depth of 800 metres along routes in the Indian, Pacific and Southern Oceans.

"There is so much ocean around Australia influencing our daily weather and longer term climate that it made sense to begin a record from which we could connect ocean change to shifts in rainfall patterns across southern Australia," said Dr Gary Meyers who, with colleagues at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) and the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in the US, established the ocean monitoring system.

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